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Gwen Ifill Biography

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Date of Birth: 1955, September 29
Years: 65 years
Nation of birth: United States of America
Height: 5 feet 5 inches
Name Gwendolyn L. Ifill
birth name Gwen Ifill
Dad Eleanor Ifill
Mother Urcille Ifill, Mr.
Nationality American
Place of birth / city Queens, New York
ethnicity Afro-American
Profession Journalist
Net worth 5 million US dollars
eye color Black
Hair color Black
face color Black
Married to N/A
Education Simmons College
Awards Peabody Award
online presence Facebook, Twitter, Instagram
tv show PBS NewsHour, Washington Week
Brothers Roberto Ifill, Maria Phillip Ifill, Oliver Ifill, Jr., Earle Ifill
Books The Breakthrough: Politics and Race in the Age of Obama

Peabody Award-winning American journalist Gwendolyn L. Ifill, popular as Gwen Ifill was the moderator and managing editor of Washington Week . She became the first woman of African descent to host a nationally televised US public affairs program with Washington Week in review. She actively worked for ‘Washington Week’ until her death. She has also worked as the co-director and co-director of the PBS News Hour which airs on PBS. She was a political analyst and had moderated the 2004 and 2008 vice presidential debates. She was a news anchor as well as an author. She is the author of the best selling bookThe Big Breakthrough: Politics and Race in the Age of Obama. Gwen Ifill died on November 14, 2016, at the age of 61. Her cause of death was breast and endometrial cancer.

Biography of the early life and education of Gwen Ifill

Gwen Ifill was born as Gwendolyn L. Ifill on September 29, 1955, in the Queens borough of Jamaica in New York City. Ifill was the daughter of African Methodist Episcopal minister Oliver Urcille Ifill Sr. and Eleanor Ifill . She had four brothers Earle Ifill , Roberto Ifill , Oliver Ifill Jr. , and Maria Phillip Ifill . Gwen’s family had emigrated from Panama to the States. She was an American by nationality and was of African American ethnicity.

His father’s ministry caused his family to live in various cities during his youth. When he was young, he lived in church parsonages in Pennsylvania and Massachusetts and subsidized housing in Buffalo and New York City.

 

In 1977, Gwen graduated with a degree in Communications from Simmons College, located in Boston. Since she always wanted to express her feelings in public, she wanted to have her career in journalism. Following her goal and dream, she continued her journey to find a career in this field.

Gwen Ifill’s career

While in college, Gwen had interned for the Boston Herald-American. After her graduation, she was hired there, but she had to feel embarrassed because one of her co-workers had given her a note on which she wrote words of humiliation, since she was a black from the United States. , ‘Go home’.

After the incident, he left his job and began working for the Baltimore Evening Sun from 1981-1984, then The Washington Post from 1984-1991, The New York Times from 1991-1994, and then joined NBC.

 

In October 1999, Gwen Ifill worked on PBS’s Washington Week in Review as a moderator and was also a senior correspondent for the PBS Newshour. She also appeared on several of the shows like Meet the Press.

He has also served on the board of the Museum of Television and Radio, the Harvard Institute of Politics, the Committee to Protect Journalists, and the Philip Merrill School of Journalism at the University of Maryland. Since 2013, she has worked as a co-anchor and co-managing editor for NewsHour.

She had been one of the legends in journalism with her career and struggles to stay at this stage. She spent over 2 decades in this field experimenting and learning things and also being the inspiration for newcomers.

 

As an author, Gwen Ifill wrote a book titled ‘The Breakthrough: Politics and Race in the Age of Obama’. The book was published in the year 2009 on January 20 dealing with various African-American politicians, including Barack Obama, Massachusetts Governor Deval Patrick, and Newark New Jersey Mayor Cory Booker. Regarding the vice presidential debates, she won many recognitions and accolades for her performance and made her popular in the field of journalism.

Gwen Ifill Net Worth

Gwen Ifill had a pleasant personality and command in her speeches and writing. She was one of the admired and reputed journalists. She had a net worth of $5 million and enjoyed a very good salary.

Gwen had some determination as she was a very ambitious person. She was an asset to the place where she works. Gwen used to work with as much enthusiasm and energy as she had in youth even when she was about to retire.

A lot of information about her can be gleaned from her biography available on different internet sites, as well as from the articles written about her. You can also follow her on Twitter.

Personal life of Gwen Ifill Married, daughter

Talking about his personal life, he never married, he did not have sons and daughters. Also regarding his relationships and affairs, boyfriends, there are no such rumors or news released. When asked about the marriage, she said:

”I don’t know why I’m not married. I just know that I will be, so I don’t worry.

Gwen talked about getting married and had even told him that she would get married when the time came, but she never had the time. She kept busy in her professional life, which could be the reason she wasn’t married.

Death

Gwen Ifill died at the age of 61 on November 14, 2016 in Washington DC Her cause of death was believed to be breast and endometrial cancer. According to CNN reports, the legend of her spent her last moment in a Washington, DC hospice surrounded by her family and friends.

Many famous personalities expressed their condolences. Former President of the United States, Barack Obama is one of them who extended his condolences to his family. He says,

“I always appreciated [his] reporting, even when [he] was on the receiving end of one of his tough interviews.”

Many other personalities like Michelle Obama and Paul Ryan also expressed their condolences.

On November 14, the PBS NewsHour “dedicated[d] our show to Gwen Ifill, who died that Monday after a battle with cancer,” suspending all but one symbolic moment from the daily news to pay tribute. Over the course of the week, this turned into a series of tributes to various NewsHours like “Remembering Gwen.”

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